现代吉尔吉斯斯坦

R. Abazov
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引用次数: 0

摘要

1924年,在完成中亚边界划分(1924 - 1926)后,卡拉-吉尔吉斯自治州(KKAO)作为俄罗斯联邦管辖下的自治州(省)成立,现代吉尔吉斯斯坦作为一个政治实体出现。然而,这个州很快更名为吉尔吉斯自治州(1925年5月)。该州于1926年2月1日升格为吉尔吉斯苏维埃社会主义自治共和国(吉尔吉斯ASSR)(也在俄罗斯联邦内)。其地位在1936年12月5日进一步提升,当时该国成为吉尔吉斯苏维埃社会主义共和国(吉尔吉斯苏维埃社会主义共和国或简称吉尔吉斯(俄语)),并成为苏维埃社会主义共和国联盟(苏联)的正式成员。在建国初期,这个新共和国缺乏凝聚力的国家经济体系、强烈的民族认同和作为一个民族国家运作所必需的人力资源。因此,20世纪二三十年代,莫斯科的苏联中央政府启动了巨额投资和技术转让,并招募了数万名专家(从教师到工程师),认为有必要搬到这个国家。苏联政策的后果有两点。一个是20世纪30年代至60年代的快速经济增长(实际上是苏联最高的经济增长之一),包括快速的工业化和城市化。另一个原因是由于苏联其他地区,特别是白俄罗斯、俄罗斯联邦和乌克兰的大量移民,人口结构发生了迅速变化。吉尔吉斯人民受益于20世纪20年代和30年代的文化大革命,识字率从1926年的4.7%增长到1936年的70 - 80%(苏联官方估计)。吉尔吉斯苏维埃社会主义共和国在20世纪40年代经历了第二波工业化和大规模移民浪潮,数百家工厂从战区迁至共和国,数万名伏尔加德国人和高加索和克里米亚人被驱逐到吉尔吉斯土地上。然而,尽管在20世纪50年代和70年代之间进行了大量投资和令人印象深刻的经济增长,吉尔吉斯苏维埃社会主义共和国仍然是苏联人均最贫穷的共和国之一。由于戈尔巴乔夫改革政策的失误,该国的经济状况在20世纪80年代末恶化。然而,吉尔吉斯政府继续支持保留苏联,尽管新兴的小反对派团体呼吁从莫斯科分裂出去。1991年苏联解体后,吉尔吉斯政府宣布完全独立。这个国家更名为吉尔吉斯共和国(KR)。在吉尔吉斯斯坦历史上第一位民选总统阿卡耶夫(Askar Akayev, 1990-2005)的领导下,吉尔吉斯斯坦成为中亚地区最民主的国家之一。它一直在努力重振摇摇欲坠的经济和基础设施,并解决大规模贫困和失业的长期问题。顽固的经济问题和系统性腐败导致了吉尔吉斯斯坦连续两次革命(2005年和2010年)。然而,这个国家已经建立了经济、法律和制度基础,以发展一个现代化、有竞争力和生产力的国民经济,因为这个国家仍然梦想着把吉尔吉斯斯坦发展成为“中亚的瑞士”。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Modern Kyrgyzstan
Modern Kyrgyzstan emerged as a political entity in 1924 when the Kara-Kyrgyz Autonomous Oblast (KKAO) was established as an autonomous oblast (province) under the jurisdiction of the Russian Federation after the completion of the border delimitation in Central Asia (1924–1926). However, the oblast very soon was renamed Kyrgyz Autonomous Oblast (May 1925). The oblast was upgraded to the status of the Kyrgyz Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic (Kyrgyz ASSR) on February 1, 1926 (also within the Russian Federation). Its status was further elevated on December 5, 1936 when the country became the Kyrgyz Soviet Socialist Republic (Kyrgyz SSR or in short Kirgizia (in Russian) and a full member of the Union of the Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR). During its early days, the new republic lacked the cohesive national economic system, strong national identity, and human resources necessary for functioning as a nation-state. Therefore, the central Soviet government in Moscow initiated huge investment and technology transfers, and recruited the tens of thousands of specialists (from teachers to engineers) it felt were necessary to move to the country in the 1920s and 1930s. The consequences of the Soviet policies were two. One was rapid economic growth between 1930s and 1960s (in fact one of the highest in the USSR), including rapid industrialization and urbanization. The other was the rapid demographic change due to the massive immigration from other parts of the Soviet Union, especially from Belorussia, the Russian Federation and Ukraine. The Kyrgyz people benefited from the cultural revolution of the 1920s and 1930s, as the literacy rate grew from 4.7 percent in 1926 to 70–80 percent in 1936 (Soviet official estimates). The Kyrgyz SSR experienced a second wave of industrialization and mass migration in the 1940s as hundreds of factories were moved to the republic from the war zone, and tens of thousands of Volga Germans and people from the Caucasus and Crimea were deported to the Kyrgyz land. However, despite massive investments and impressive economic growth between the 1950s and 1970s, the Kyrgyz SSR remained one of the poorest republics in the term of per capita in the USSR. Economic conditions in the country deteriorated in the late 1980s due to the blunders in the Gorbachev policy of perestroika. Yet, the Kyrgyz government continued to support the preservation of the Soviet Union, although small emerging opposition groups called for secession from Moscow. The Kyrgyz government declared its full independence in 1991 as the Soviet Union finally disintegrated. The country was renamed the Kyrgyz Republic (KR). Under the leadership of President Askar Akayev (1990–2005), the first democratically elected president in the history of Kyrgyzstan, the country became one of the most democratic states in the Central Asian region. It has struggled to revive its crumbling economy and infrastructure and to address its chronic problems of mass poverty and unemployment. Intransigent economic problems and systemic corruption have led to two consecutive revolutions in Kyrgyzstan (in 2005 and 2010). Yet, the country has established economic, legal, and institutional foundations for the development of a modern, competitive and productive national economy as the nation still dreams of developing Kyrgyzstan to become the “Switzerland of Central Asia.”
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